Worldwide semiconductor revenue growth adjusted + 0.6% :iSuppli
El Segundo (CA) - Citing a leveling off in the DRAM supply dilemma, analysts at iSuppli today were happy to announce they’re adjusting their 2006 forecast for worldwide semiconductor market revenue. While DRAM sales fell 6.2% last year, according to iSuppli estimates, they’re expected to rise by the same amount this year, and account for 10% of overall semiconductor sales revenue.

iSuppli’s adjusted worldwide revenue forecast.
As a result, iSuppli is making an adjustment to its predicted growth rate for the entire market, from 6.8% to 7.4%. Worldwide semiconductor revenue is now expected to top off at $254.7 billion at the end of the calendar year, versus $237.1 billion in 2005. With the adjustments factored in for successive years, the firm now expects a $285.2 billion figure for 2007.
iSuppli’s good news does not translate to derivative sectors of the technology economy, however. The global growth rate of sales for electronic equipment that uses semiconductors, is expected to fall from 7.8% last year to 5.9% this year. Remember, this is not a reduction in sales (DRAM sales really did fall last year), but a decline in the rate of growth.
It’s interesting to note that iSuppli’s figures are not adjusted to account for global inflation. The International Monetary Fund, late last year, estimated the global consumer price index for 2005 to be 4%, and trending lower.
- First data on Xbox 360 camera
- Via announces "Vista Premium ready" chipset
- FDA to review wireless phone safety
- One laptop per child aims at $50 price tag
- Earthlink and Google get free Wi-Fi deal in San Francisco
- Sony likely to price Playstation 3 above $500
- Broadcom announces 7.2 Mb/s single-chip HSDPA mobile phone processor
- SDRAM shortage may be aggravated by product adjustments by SMIC and Samsung
- Sources claim SanDisk raises memory card prices in US
- ATI enables High Dynamic Range and anti-aliasing in Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion
- GPS could drive you off a cliff in England
- US cellphone penetration close to 70%
- No Office 13?! 24 percent of people will run me over today?!! Must be the morning roundup...
- Ultra-Wideband and USB: Q&A with Calvin Harrison of Freescale
- TI executive claims DLP has over 50% of projector market
- WitsView: Notebook panels top ASP drops in April
- Microsoft's MSN Search restored after hours-long outage
- Cingular to sell ringtones from MySpace bands




